Literature DB >> 23153273

General anesthesia and human brain connectivity.

Anthony G Hudetz1.   

Abstract

General anesthesia consists of amnesia, hypnosis, analgesia, and areflexia. Of these, the mechanism of hypnosis, or loss of consciousness, has been the most elusive, yet a fascinating problem. How anesthetic agents suppress human consciousness has been investigated with neuroimaging for two decades. Anesthetics substantially reduce the global cerebral metabolic rate and blood flow with a degree of regional heterogeneity characteristic to the anesthetic agent. The thalamus appears to be a common site of modulation by several anesthetics, but this may be secondary to cortical effects. Stimulus-dependent brain activation is preserved in primary sensory areas, suggesting that unconsciousness cannot be explained by cortical deafferentation or a diminution of cortical sensory reactivity. The effect of general anesthetics in functional and effective connectivity is varied depending on the agent, dose, and network studied. At an anesthetic depth characterized by the subjects' unresponsiveness, a partial, but not complete, reduction in connectivity is generally observed. Functional connectivity of the frontoparietal association cortex is often reduced, but a causal role of this change for the loss of consciousness remains uncertain. Functional connectivity of the nonspecific (intralaminar) thalamic nuclei is preferentially reduced by propofol. Higher-order thalamocortical connectivity is also reduced with certain anesthetics. The changes in functional connectivity during anesthesia induction and emergence do not mirror each other; the recovery from anesthesia may involve increases in functional connectivity above the normal wakeful baseline. Anesthetic loss of consciousness is not a block of corticofugal information transfer, but a disruption of higher-order cortical information integration. The prime candidates for functional networks of the forebrain that play a critical role in maintaining the state of consciousness are those based on the posterior parietal-cingulate-precuneus region and the nonspecific thalamus.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 23153273      PMCID: PMC3621592          DOI: 10.1089/brain.2012.0107

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain Connect        ISSN: 2158-0014


  99 in total

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3.  Connectivity changes underlying spectral EEG changes during propofol-induced loss of consciousness.

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Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2012-05-16       Impact factor: 6.167

Review 4.  Common fronto-parietal activity in attention, memory, and consciousness: shared demands on integration?

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5.  Persistent default-mode network connectivity during light sedation.

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6.  Dissociable network properties of anesthetic state transitions.

Authors:  UnCheol Lee; Markus Müller; Gyu-Jeong Noh; ByungMoon Choi; George A Mashour
Journal:  Anesthesiology       Date:  2011-04       Impact factor: 7.892

7.  Cortical and subcortical connectivity changes during decreasing levels of consciousness in humans: a functional magnetic resonance imaging study using propofol.

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Review 8.  Coma and consciousness: paradigms (re)framed by neuroimaging.

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9.  Isoflurane anesthesia blunts cerebral responses to noxious and innocuous stimuli: a fMRI study.

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10.  A conserved behavioral state barrier impedes transitions between anesthetic-induced unconsciousness and wakefulness: evidence for neural inertia.

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Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2010-07-30       Impact factor: 3.240

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  83 in total

1.  Cortico-centric effects of general anesthetics on cerebrocortical evoked potentials.

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2.  Regional entropy of functional imaging signals varies differently in sensory and cognitive systems during propofol-modulated loss and return of behavioral responsiveness.

Authors:  Xiaolin Liu; Kathryn K Lauer; B Douglas Ward; Christopher J Roberts; Suyan Liu; Suneeta Gollapudy; Robert Rohloff; William Gross; Zhan Xu; Shanshan Chen; Lubin Wang; Zheng Yang; Shi-Jiang Li; Jeffrey R Binder; Anthony G Hudetz
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Review 3.  Modeling the dynamical effects of anesthesia on brain circuits.

Authors:  Shinung Ching; Emery N Brown
Journal:  Curr Opin Neurobiol       Date:  2014-01-21       Impact factor: 6.627

Review 4.  Memory formation during anaesthesia: plausibility of a neurophysiological basis.

Authors:  R A Veselis
Journal:  Br J Anaesth       Date:  2015-03-03       Impact factor: 9.166

5.  Cortical and subcortical volume differences between Benign Epilepsy with Centrotemporal Spikes and Childhood Absence Epilepsy.

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6.  Dynamic repertoire of intrinsic brain states is reduced in propofol-induced unconsciousness.

Authors:  Anthony G Hudetz; Xiping Liu; Siveshigan Pillay
Journal:  Brain Connect       Date:  2014-05-21

7.  Isoflurane and ketamine differentially influence spontaneous and evoked laminar electrophysiology in mouse V1.

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8.  Repertoire of mesoscopic cortical activity is not reduced during anesthesia.

Authors:  Anthony G Hudetz; Jeannette A Vizuete; Siveshigan Pillay; George A Mashour
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Review 9.  General Anesthetics and Neurotoxicity: How Much Do We Know?

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10.  Dynamics of Propofol-Induced Loss of Consciousness Across Primate Neocortex.

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